Free Regular Show Coloring Pages: 50+ printable PDF pages featuring Mordecai and Rigby in solo and duo pages, Benson, Pops Maellard, Skips, Sensei, Hi Five Ghost, and Eileen, plus action scenes including singing, dancing, fighting, and riding a motorcycle. All free, download PDF to print, or color online.

The two leads make a visually complementary pair. Mordecai is a blue jay: clean sky blue with white and black wing markings and a yellow beak, a cool palette that reads clearly even on a simple outline. Rigby is a raccoon: warm brown with darker brown markings and pale cream accents, all warm tones that sit comfortably next to Mordecai’s cooler blue. On duo pages, the contrast between those two palettes, warm brown against cool blue, is what gives every scene its visual balance without any extra effort.

The pages are divided into two types of work. Duo and group pages, Mordecai and Rigby singing, dancing, fighting, riding a motorcycle, or just standing together, ask you to hold both palettes in balance while keeping each character distinct in a shared composition. Solo pages, Rigby looking cool, Mordecai alone, Benson’s face close-up, Pops Maellard, Skips, Sensei, put the focus on a single character’s palette and expression: getting the tones right and capturing the particular attitude each character carries. Simpler outlines and single-character pages suit younger fans and quick sessions; the detailed scene and action pages reward more time and attention.

These pages work well at home or as fan art for any Cartoon Network viewer. These are fan-made coloring pages and are not official, licensed, or endorsed by Cartoon Network, Warner Bros. Discovery, or any rights holder of the Regular Show franchise.

Quick Answer

Regular Show coloring pages are a free set of 50+ printable PDFs and online coloring sheets covering Mordecai, Rigby, Benson, Pops, Skips, Sensei, Hi Five Ghost, and Eileen across solo, duo, and scene pages. The natural warm-cool contrast between Rigby’s brown and Mordecai’s blue makes every page with both characters visually coherent from the first stroke.

Best for: Regular Show fans, Cartoon Network fans, older kids, teens, adults, and anyone who enjoys classic animated character coloring. 

Formats: printable PDF and online coloring.

Popular characters: Mordecai, Rigby, Benson, Pops Maellard, and Skips. 

Creative uses: fan art practice, warm-cool color contrast study, Cartoon Network character displays, action scene coloring, and duo portrait work

What’s Inside Regular Show Coloring Pages

Mordecai Coloring Pages

Mordecai appears in multiple solo sheets: Mordecai from Regular Show, Mordecai Regular Show, a cool Mordecai version, and several printable variants.

Coloring Mordecai: his body is a clean, even sky blue, consistent across his entire frame, with black and white wing markings where his arms would be on a human figure, a bright yellow beak, and dark eyes. Keep the blue cool and relatively flat: Mordecai’s design does not rely on shading, and a clean, even fill reads truer to the Show’s style than a heavily blended one.

Rigby Coloring Pages

Rigby appears in several solo sheets: Rigby Regular Show, Rigby looking cool, happy Rigby, funny Rigby, cool Rigby, Rigby from Regular Show, and Rigby in Regular Show.

Coloring Rigby: Rigby is warm brown with slightly darker brown markings around his eyes and back, and pale cream on his chest and inner ears. His eyes are wide and expressive. The warm tones are the whole character: do not let the brown drift grey or cool, as that strips him of the friendliness that makes his pairing with Mordecai work visually.

Mordecai and Rigby Duo Pages

The largest group in the set shows Mordecai and Rigby together in action: singing, dancing, fighting, riding a motorcycle, standing side by side, and in a series of labeled Mordecai and Rigby variants.

Coloring the duo: the warm-cool pairing means the two characters naturally separate on the page without extra effort. Give Rigby his warm brown first, Mordecai his cool blue second, and then stand back: the contrast does the compositional work. On action pages, the energy comes from the poses and expressions, so the coloring can stay relatively flat and let the linework carry the movement.

Benson Coloring Pages

Benson appears in three sheets: Benson Regular Show, Benson in Regular Show, Benson from Regular Show, and a Benson face close-up.

Coloring Benson: Benson is a gumball machine, which means his head is a glass sphere filled with colorful gumballs, with a coin slot at the front. His head is the most technically distinctive design in the set. Use pale blue-grey for the glass dome, then fill the interior with small circles in red, yellow, green, orange, and pink to suggest gumballs. His body is a simple pink-peach-suited figure. Keep the dome pale so the gumballs inside read through it.

Pops Maellard, Skips, and Supporting Characters

Pops Maellard appears in two sheets, Skips in one, Sensei in three scenes (including the Death Sandwich arc pages), Hi Five Ghost in one, and Eileen in one.

Coloring the supporting cast: Pops has a large, round, lollipop-shaped head in light pink, a pale complexion, and Victorian-style clothing in cream and maroon. Skips is a large white yeti with a gentle expression. Sensei wears a traditional martial arts gi. Hi Five Ghost is exactly what the name suggests: a small ghost with a hand raised in a high-five, pale white or translucent grey. Staying close to each character’s series look makes group pages or fan displays immediately recognizable to any viewer.

Scene and Action Pages

Several pages capture specific moments: the guys watching a blonde guard plummet, ready for the next chamber, ready to fight the overall cutoff guards, Rigby and Eileen from Regular Show, and the general fighting scene.

Coloring the scene pages: action and scene pages are the most compositionally demanding pages in the set. The Sensei arc pages have multiple characters and an environmental context. Give each character its own clearly defined color territory before adding any background. A warm mid-tone background (tan or soft yellow) keeps Mordecai’s blue and Rigby’s brown both readable without competing with either.

Printable PDF and Online Regular Show Coloring Pages

Every design comes in two ways: a printable PDF for paper, or the same artwork colored on screen.

Using both formats: print the PDF when you want a clean sheet for pencils, markers, or crayons, and use the on-screen version when there is no printer nearby. The PDF holds the Show’s clean, rounded character outlines well on standard letter or A4 paper.

What These Pages Do

Regular Show built its visual identity around contrast: two best friends who look nothing alike and whose color palettes sit on opposite ends of the warm-cool scale, working together at a job that should be boring but never is. That visual logic is embedded in every page that features both characters. Coloring a Mordecai and Rigby duo page means making the same decision the Show’s designers made: how do warm brown and cool blue share a composition without one swallowing the other? The answer, as the Show demonstrated across eight seasons, is that they do not need to fight because the contrast itself is the design. Practicing that kind of intuitive color pairing on these pages builds a skill that carries over to any subject involving two characters or two dominant tones. For more Cartoon Network, Adventure Time coloring pages, and Gravity Falls coloring pages offer a similar era of animated storytelling, and Steven Universe coloring pages extend the Cartoon Network character-coloring range further.

The American Art Therapy Association describes everyday coloring as recreation and self-care rather than clinical therapy. For a Regular Show fan, picking up a Mordecai and Rigby page is exactly that: a calm, screen-free activity centered on characters and a world that genuinely appeals to them. The American Academy of Pediatrics points to creative, imaginative activities as a recognized part of healthy development across childhood and into adolescence, and the action and scene pages here offer exactly the kind of open-ended, character-driven creative engagement the AAP describes.

How to Color Regular Show Coloring Pages

These steps work for any page in the set, from a clean solo outline to the full multi-character scene.

Lay in Rigby’s brown and Mordecai’s blue first on any duo page. These two base tones set the entire palette for the page. Everything else, backgrounds, accents, expressions, adjusts around them, not the other way around.

Keep both base tones flat and even. Regular Show’s animation style uses relatively flat fills rather than heavy shading. An even blue and an even brown, both at full saturation, look more like the Show than blended or heavily shadowed versions. Let the outlines carry the form.

On the Benson pages, work the gumball dome carefully. Lay the pale blue-grey glass tone across the whole dome first, then add the colored gumball circles on top. Keeping the dome tone lighter than any of the gumball colors ensures the sphere reads as glass rather than a solid shape.

Give the scene pages a background before finishing the characters. On multi-character action pages, a warm neutral background, tan, soft green, or pale yellow, stops the figures from floating. Choose the background tone before filling the characters so you can adjust Mordecai’s blue slightly warmer or Rigby’s brown slightly cooler if the background creates a clash.

Match palette intensity to character energy. A cool Rigby or cool Mordecai page suits a slightly more graphic, poster-style approach: bolder tones, stronger outlines, minimal background. An action or fighting page suits the same bold approach, but with more attention to the expressions driving the scene.

5 Creative Craft Ideas with Regular Show Coloring Pages

Warm-Cool Contrast Study

Color a solo Mordecai page and a solo Rigby page separately, each in its series palette.

Pin them side by side to show the warm-cool contrast built into the Show’s visual identity, as a practical example of how color communicates personality before a character says a word.

Mordecai and Rigby Action Strip

Color three action duo pages in sequence, for example, the fighting page, the dancing page, and the motorcycle page, and arrange them horizontally.

Add panel borders and the Show’s title above for a fan-made comic strip celebrating the duo’s energy.

Benson Gumball Machine Study

Color the Benson face close-up page, giving careful attention to the gumball dome and the individual gumball colors inside.

Label the dome material (glass) and each gumball color as a design study showing how a non-standard character head is constructed in flat animation.

Regular Show Crew Display

Color one page per main character: Mordecai, Rigby, Benson, Pops, and Skips, all in their series-accurate palettes.

Arrange them on a large sheet with each character’s name and role (groundskeeper, park manager, Skips the handyman) for a fan crew wall chart.

Sensei Arc Scene

Color the Sensei arc pages, the Death Sandwich scene, the bridge-pinching scene, and the guys ready for the next chamber together as a connected scene sequence.

Mount them in order with short captions to create a mini fan storyboard of one of the Show’s most memorable arcs.

FAQ About Regular Show Coloring Pages

Are these Regular Show pages free, and can I color them online?

Yes. Every page is free, with no account, email, or payment required. Download the PDF to print at home, or color the design on screen in the browser.

Which characters are included?

The set covers Mordecai, Rigby, Benson, Pops Maellard, Skips, Sensei, Hi Five Ghost, and Eileen across solo, duo, and scene pages, plus a full characters page and several action and scene designs.

What is Regular Show?

Regular Show is an animated comedy series created by J.G. Quintel that ran on Cartoon Network from 2010 to 2017 across eight seasons. It follows Mordecai, a blue jay, and Rigby, a raccoon, who work as groundskeepers at a park and repeatedly find their ordinary tasks escalating into surreal and dangerous situations. You can read more on the Wikipedia page.

What colors should I use for Mordecai?

Mordecai is a clean sky blue across his entire body, with black and white wing markings on his arms and a bright yellow beak. Keep the blue cool and even: his design reads best as a flat, consistent fill rather than a heavily shaded one.

What colors should I use for Rigby?

Rigby is warm brown with slightly darker brown markings around his eyes and back, and pale cream on his chest and inner ears. Keep the brown warm and avoid letting it drift grey: the warmth of his tones is what makes his pairing with Mordecai’s cool blue work as a visual pair.

What makes Benson different from color?

Benson’s head is a glass gumball machine dome, and the challenge is making it read as glass rather than a solid shape. The key is keeping the dome tone lighter than the gumball colors inside it. On the face close-up page, this distinction is especially visible: the sphere needs to look like it contains the gumballs rather than wearing them as a flat pattern.

Are these pages good for younger children?

The simpler outlines, solo character pages, and basic duo designs suit younger children well. The multi-character scene pages, particularly the Sensei arc pages, are better suited to older fans who enjoy a more detailed coloring session.

Are there pages showing specific moments from the Show?

Yes. The set includes pages from the Sensei arc (Death Sandwich, bridge pinching, next chamber), the guys watching a guard plummet, the Overall Cutoff Guards scene, and action pages showing Mordecai and Rigby singing, dancing, fighting, and riding a motorcycle.

Are these official Regular Show coloring pages?

No. They are fan-made coloring sheets for personal use and are not affiliated with J.G. Quintel, Cartoon Network, or Warner Bros. Discovery.

What crafts can I make with these pages?

Popular options include a warm-cool contrast study, a Mordecai and Rigby action strip, a Benson gumball machine study, a Regular Show crew display, and a Sensei arc scene sequence.

More Cartoon Network Coloring Pages

Browse the full set at ColoringPagesOnly.com, then open any design to print it or color it on screen.

These pages suit home use and fan creative sessions for all ages. They are fan-made coloring designs and are not official products of Cartoon Network or the Regular Show franchise.

For the final pass, keep Rigby’s brown warm, Mordecai’s blue cool and flat, and let the warm-cool contrast do the compositional work. Those three habits carry across every duo page in the set.

Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #ColoringPagesOnly. We would love to see your contrast studies, action strips, and crew displays.

These related coloring collections will help you explore the wonderful world of colors. Let’s choose, be creative, and show us your great pictures!

Jennifer Thoa – Content Editor & Designer

Jennifer Thoa is Content Editor and Designer at ColoringPagesOnly.com. Degree in Journalism and Creative Writing, University of Kansas. She writes and edits long-form educational articles on anime, film, animals, world cultures, and automotive history - verified against named primary sources before publication.